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Let 8 be a Riemann surface of analytically finite type (9, n) with
29 - 2+n> O. Take two pointsP1, P2 E 8, and set 8 ,1>2= 8 \
{P1' P2}. Let PI Homeo+(8;P1,P2) be the group of all orientation
preserving homeomor- phismsw: 8 -+ 8 fixingP1, P2 and isotopic to
the identity on 8. Denote byHomeot(8;Pb P2) the set of all elements
ofHomeo+(8;P1, P2) iso- topic to the identity on 8 ,P2'
ThenHomeot(8;P1,P2) is a normal sub- pl group ofHomeo+(8;P1,P2). We
setIsot(8;P1,P2) =Homeo+(8;P1,P2)/ Homeot(8;p1, P2). The purpose of
this note is to announce a result on the Nielsen- Thurston-Bers
type classification of an element [w] ofIsot+(8;P1,P2). We give a
necessary and sufficient condition for thetypeto be hyperbolic. The
condition is described in terms of properties of the pure braid [b
] w induced by [w]. Proofs will appear elsewhere. The problem
considered in this note and the form ofthe solution are suggested
by Kra's beautiful theorem in [6], where he treats self-maps of
Riemann surfaces with one specified point. 2
TheclassificationduetoBers Let us recall the classification of
elements of the mapping class group due to Bers (see Bers [1]).
LetT(R) be the Teichmiiller space of a Riemann surfaceR, andMod(R)
be the Teichmtiller modular group of R. Note that an orientation
preserving homeomorphism w: R -+ R induces canonically an element
(w) EMod(R). Denote by&.r(R)(*,.) the Teichmiiller distance
onT(R). For an elementXEMod(R), we define a(x)= inf
&.r(R)(r,x(r)).
This book is the Proceedings of the Second ISAAC Congress. ISAAC is
the acronym of the International Society for Analysis, its
Applications and Computation. The president of ISAAC is Professor
Robert P. Gilbert, the second named editor of this book, e-mail:
[email protected]. The Congress is world-wide valued so highly
that an application for a grant has been selected and this project
has been executed with Grant No. 11-56 from *the Commemorative
Association for the Japan World Exposition (1970). The finance of
the publication of this book is exclusively the said Grant No.
11-56 from *. Thus, a pair of each one copy of two volumes of this
book will be sent to all contributors, who registered at the Second
ISAAC Congress in Fukuoka, free of charge by the Kluwer Academic
Publishers. Analysis is understood here in the broad sense of the
word, includ ing differential equations, integral equations,
functional analysis, and function theory. It is the purpose of
ISAAC to promote analysis, its applications, and its interaction
with computation. With this objective, ISAAC organizes
international Congresses for the presentation and dis cussion of
research on analysis. ISAAC welcomes new members and those
interested in joining ISAAC are encouraged to look at the web site
http: //www .math. udel.edu/ gilbert/isaac/index.html vi and http:
//www.math.fu-berlin.de/ rd/ ag/isaac/newton/index.html."
This volume consists of papers presented in the special sessions on
"Complex and Numerical Analysis," "Value Distribution Theory and
Complex Domains," and "Use of Symbolic Computation in Mathematics
Education" of the ISAAC'97 Congress held at the University of
Delaware, during June 2-7, 1997. The ISAAC Congress coincided with
a U.S.-Japan Seminar also held at the University of Delaware. The
latter was supported by the National Science Foundation through
Grant INT-9603029 and the Japan Society for the Promotion of
Science through Grant MTCS-134. It was natural that the
participants of both meetings should interact and consequently
several persons attending the Congress also presented papers in the
Seminar. The success of the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan
Seminar has led to the ISAAC'99 Congress being held in Fukuoka,
Japan during August 1999. Many of the same participants will return
to this Seminar. Indeed, it appears that the spirit of the
U.S.-Japan Seminar will be continued every second year as part of
the ISAAC Congresses. We decided to include with the papers
presented in the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan Seminar several
very good papers by colleagues from the former Soviet Union. These
participants in the ISAAC Congress attended at their own expense.
The 3rd International ISAAC Congress took place from August 20 to
25, 2001 in Berlin, Germany, supported by the German Research
Foundation (DFG), the city of Berlin through Investitionsbank
Berlin and the Freie Universitiit Berlin. 10 ISAAC Awards were
presented to young researchers in analysis its applications and
computation from all over the world on the basis of financial
support from Siemens, Daimler Crysler, Motorola and the Berlin
Mathematical Society and book gifts from Birkhauser Verlag,
Elsevier, Kluwer Academic Publisher, Springer Verlag and World
Scientific. The ISAAC is grateful to all these institutions, firms
and publishers for their support. Due to the support from DFG and
from Investitions bank Berlin many of the 362 registrated
participants could be financially supported. Unfortunately the
financial supports were granted too late to reach more people from
former SU as the procedere for visa is still more than cumbersome
and embassies are not at all flexible. Hence, a big part of the
financial support could not be used and had to be returned. The 10
plenary lectures were 1. Antoniou, 1. Prigogine (Intern. Solvay
Inst. Phys. Chem., Brussels): Irreversibility and the probabilistic
description of unstable evolutions beyond the Hilbert space
framework (read by 1. Antoniou), N.S. Bakhvalov, M.E. Eglit (Math.
Mech. Dept., Lomonosov State Univ."
This volume of the Proceedings of the congress ISAAC '97 collects
the con tributions of the four sections 1. Function theoretic and
functional analytic methods for pde, 2. Applications of function
theory of several complex variables to pde, 3. Integral equations
and boundary value problems, 4. Partial differential equations.
Most but not all of the authors have participated in the congress.
Unfortunately some from Eastern Europe and Asia have not managed to
come because of lack of financial support. Nevertheless their
manuscripts of the proposed talks are included in this volume. The
majority of the papers deal with complex methods. Among them
boundary value problems in particular the Riemann-Hilbert, the
Riemann (Hilbert) and related problems are treated. Boundary
behaviour of vector-valued functions are studied too. The
Riemann-Hilbert problem is solved for elliptic complex equations,
for mixed complex equations, and for several complex variables. It
is considered in a general topological setting for mappings into
q;n and related to Toeplitz operators. Convolution operators are
investigated for nilpotent Lie groups leading to some consequences
for the null space of the tangential Cauchy Riemann operator. Some
boundary value problems for overdetermined systems in balls of q;n
are solved explicitly. A survey is given for the Gauss-Manin
connection associated with deformations of curve singularities.
Several papers deal with generalizations of analytic functions with
various applications to mathematical physics. Singular integrals in
quaternionic anal ysis are studied which are applied to the
time-harmonic Maxwell equations."
This collection of papers is dedicated to the memory of Gaetano
Fichera, a great mathematician and also a good friend to the
editors. Regrettably it took an unusual amount of time to bring
this collection out. This was primarily due to the fact that the
main editor who had collected all of the materials, for this
volume, P. D. Panagiotopoulos, died unexpectedly during the period
when we were editing the manuscript. The other two editors in
appreciation of Panagiotopoulos' contribution to this field,
believe it is therefore fitting that this collection be dedicated
to his memory also. The theme of the collection is centered around
the seminal research of G. Fichera on the Signorini problem.
Variants on this idea enter in different ways. For example, by
bringing in friction the problem is no longer self-adjoint and the
minimization formulation is not valid. A large portion of this
collection is devoted to survey papers concerning hemivariational
methods, with a main point of its application to nonsmooth
mechanics. Hemivariational inequali ties, which are a
generalization of variational inequalities, were pioneered by
Panagiotopoulos. There are many applications of this theory to the
study of non convex energy functionals occurring in many branches
of mechanics. An area of concentration concerns contact problems,
in particular, quasistatic and dynamic contact problems with
friction and damage. Nonsmooth optimization methods which may be
divided into the main groups of subgradient methods and bundle
methods are also discussed in this collection."
This volume consists of papers presented in the special sessions on
"Wave Phenomena and Related Topics," and "Asymptotics and
Homogenization" of the ISAAC'97 Congress held at the University of
Delaware, during June 2-7, 1997. The ISAAC Congress coincided with
a U.S.-Japan Seminar also held at the University of Delaware. The
latter was supported by the National Science Foundation through
Grant INT -9603029 and the Japan Society for the Promotion of
Science through Grant MTCS-134. It was natural that the
'participants of both meetings should interact and consequently
several persons attending the Congress also presented papers in the
Seminar. The success of the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan
Seminar has led to the ISAAC'99 Congress being held in Fukuoka,
Japan during August 1999. Many of the same participants will return
to this Seminar. Indeed, it appears that the spirit of the
U.S.-Japan Seminar will be continued every second year as part of
the ISAAC Congresses. We decided to include with the papers
presented in the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan Seminar several
very good papers by colleagues from the former Soviet Union. These
participants in the ISAAC Congress attended at their own expense.
This volume has the title Direct and Inverse Problems of
Mathematical Physics which consists of the papers on scattering
theory, coefficient identification, uniqueness and existence
theorems, boundary controllability, wave propagation in stratified
media, viscous flows, nonlinear acoustics, Sobolev spaces,
singularity theory, pseudo differential operators, and semigroup
theory.
This volume of the Proceedings of the congress ISAAC '97 collects
the con tributions of the four sections 1. Function theoretic and
functional analytic methods for pde, 2. Applications of function
theory of several complex variables to pde, 3. Integral equations
and boundary value problems, 4. Partial differential equations.
Most but not all of the authors have participated in the congress.
Unfortunately some from Eastern Europe and Asia have not managed to
come because of lack of financial support. Nevertheless their
manuscripts of the proposed talks are included in this volume. The
majority of the papers deal with complex methods. Among them
boundary value problems in particular the Riemann-Hilbert, the
Riemann (Hilbert) and related problems are treated. Boundary
behaviour of vector-valued functions are studied too. The
Riemann-Hilbert problem is solved for elliptic complex equations,
for mixed complex equations, and for several complex variables. It
is considered in a general topological setting for mappings into
q;n and related to Toeplitz operators. Convolution operators are
investigated for nilpotent Lie groups leading to some consequences
for the null space of the tangential Cauchy Riemann operator. Some
boundary value problems for overdetermined systems in balls of q;n
are solved explicitly. A survey is given for the Gauss-Manin
connection associated with deformations of curve singularities.
Several papers deal with generalizations of analytic functions with
various applications to mathematical physics. Singular integrals in
quaternionic anal ysis are studied which are applied to the
time-harmonic Maxwell equations."
This collection of papers is dedicated to the memory of Gaetano
Fichera, a great mathematician and also a good friend to the
editors. Regrettably it took an unusual amount of time to bring
this collection out. This was primarily due to the fact that the
main editor who had collected all of the materials, for this
volume, P. D. Panagiotopoulos, died unexpectedly during the period
when we were editing the manuscript. The other two editors in
appreciation of Panagiotopoulos' contribution to this field,
believe it is therefore fitting that this collection be dedicated
to his memory also. The theme of the collection is centered around
the seminal research of G. Fichera on the Signorini problem.
Variants on this idea enter in different ways. For example, by
bringing in friction the problem is no longer self-adjoint and the
minimization formulation is not valid. A large portion of this
collection is devoted to survey papers concerning hemivariational
methods, with a main point of its application to nonsmooth
mechanics. Hemivariational inequali ties, which are a
generalization of variational inequalities, were pioneered by
Panagiotopoulos. There are many applications of this theory to the
study of non convex energy functionals occurring in many branches
of mechanics. An area of concentration concerns contact problems,
in particular, quasistatic and dynamic contact problems with
friction and damage. Nonsmooth optimization methods which may be
divided into the main groups of subgradient methods and bundle
methods are also discussed in this collection."
This volume consists of papers presented in the special sessions on
"Complex and Numerical Analysis," "Value Distribution Theory and
Complex Domains," and "Use of Symbolic Computation in Mathematics
Education" of the ISAAC'97 Congress held at the University of
Delaware, during June 2-7, 1997. The ISAAC Congress coincided with
a U.S.-Japan Seminar also held at the University of Delaware. The
latter was supported by the National Science Foundation through
Grant INT-9603029 and the Japan Society for the Promotion of
Science through Grant MTCS-134. It was natural that the
participants of both meetings should interact and consequently
several persons attending the Congress also presented papers in the
Seminar. The success of the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan
Seminar has led to the ISAAC'99 Congress being held in Fukuoka,
Japan during August 1999. Many of the same participants will return
to this Seminar. Indeed, it appears that the spirit of the
U.S.-Japan Seminar will be continued every second year as part of
the ISAAC Congresses. We decided to include with the papers
presented in the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan Seminar several
very good papers by colleagues from the former Soviet Union. These
participants in the ISAAC Congress attended at their own expense.
This book is the Proceedings of the Second ISAAC Congress. ISAAC is
the acronym of the International Society for Analysis, its
Applications and Computation. The president of ISAAC is Professor
Robert P. Gilbert, the second named editor of this book, e-mail:
[email protected]. The Congress is world-wide valued so highly
that an application for a grant has been selected and this project
has been executed with Grant No. 11-56 from *the Commemorative
Association for the Japan World Exposition (1970). The finance of
the publication of this book is exclusively the said Grant No.
11-56 from *. Thus, a pair of each one copy of two volumes of this
book will be sent to all contributors, who registered at the Second
ISAAC Congress in Fukuoka, free of charge by the Kluwer Academic
Publishers. Analysis is understood here in the broad sense of the
word, includ ing differential equations, integral equations,
functional analysis, and function theory. It is the purpose of
ISAAC to promote analysis, its applications, and its interaction
with computation. With this objective, ISAAC organizes
international Congresses for the presentation and dis cussion of
research on analysis. ISAAC welcomes new members and those
interested in joining ISAAC are encouraged to look at the web site
http://www .math. udel.edu/ gilbert/isaac/index.html vi and
http://www.math.fu-berlin.de/ rd/ ag/isaac/newton/index.html.
Let 8 be a Riemann surface of analytically finite type (9, n) with
29 - 2+n> O. Take two pointsP1, P2 E 8, and set 8 ,1>2= 8 \
{P1' P2}. Let PI Homeo+(8;P1,P2) be the group of all orientation
preserving homeomor- phismsw: 8 -+ 8 fixingP1, P2 and isotopic to
the identity on 8. Denote byHomeot(8;Pb P2) the set of all elements
ofHomeo+(8;P1, P2) iso- topic to the identity on 8 ,P2'
ThenHomeot(8;P1,P2) is a normal sub- pl group ofHomeo+(8;P1,P2). We
setIsot(8;P1,P2) =Homeo+(8;P1,P2)/ Homeot(8;p1, P2). The purpose of
this note is to announce a result on the Nielsen- Thurston-Bers
type classification of an element [w] ofIsot+(8;P1,P2). We give a
necessary and sufficient condition for thetypeto be hyperbolic. The
condition is described in terms of properties of the pure braid [b
] w induced by [w]. Proofs will appear elsewhere. The problem
considered in this note and the form ofthe solution are suggested
by Kra's beautiful theorem in [6], where he treats self-maps of
Riemann surfaces with one specified point. 2
TheclassificationduetoBers Let us recall the classification of
elements of the mapping class group due to Bers (see Bers [1]).
LetT(R) be the Teichmiiller space of a Riemann surfaceR, andMod(R)
be the Teichmtiller modular group of R. Note that an orientation
preserving homeomorphism w: R -+ R induces canonically an element
(w) EMod(R). Denote by&.r(R)(*,.) the Teichmiiller distance
onT(R). For an elementXEMod(R), we define a(x)= inf
&.r(R)(r,x(r)).
The 3rd International ISAAC Congress took place from August 20 to
25, 2001 in Berlin, Germany, supported by the German Research
Foundation (DFG), the city of Berlin through Investitionsbank
Berlin and the Freie Universitiit Berlin. 10 ISAAC Awards were
presented to young researchers in analysis its applications and
computation from all over the world on the basis of financial
support from Siemens, Daimler Crysler, Motorola and the Berlin
Mathematical Society and book gifts from Birkhauser Verlag,
Elsevier, Kluwer Academic Publisher, Springer Verlag and World
Scientific. The ISAAC is grateful to all these institutions, firms
and publishers for their support. Due to the support from DFG and
from Investitions bank Berlin many of the 362 registrated
participants could be financially supported. Unfortunately the
financial supports were granted too late to reach more people from
former SU as the procedere for visa is still more than cumbersome
and embassies are not at all flexible. Hence, a big part of the
financial support could not be used and had to be returned. The 10
plenary lectures were 1. Antoniou, 1. Prigogine (Intern. Solvay
Inst. Phys. Chem., Brussels): Irreversibility and the probabilistic
description of unstable evolutions beyond the Hilbert space
framework (read by 1. Antoniou), N.S. Bakhvalov, M.E. Eglit (Math.
Mech. Dept., Lomonosov State Univ."
This volume consists of papers presented in the special sessions on
"Wave Phenomena and Related Topics," and "Asymptotics and
Homogenization" of the ISAAC'97 Congress held at the University of
Delaware, during June 2-7, 1997. The ISAAC Congress coincided with
a U.S.-Japan Seminar also held at the University of Delaware. The
latter was supported by the National Science Foundation through
Grant INT -9603029 and the Japan Society for the Promotion of
Science through Grant MTCS-134. It was natural that the
'participants of both meetings should interact and consequently
several persons attending the Congress also presented papers in the
Seminar. The success of the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan
Seminar has led to the ISAAC'99 Congress being held in Fukuoka,
Japan during August 1999. Many of the same participants will return
to this Seminar. Indeed, it appears that the spirit of the
U.S.-Japan Seminar will be continued every second year as part of
the ISAAC Congresses. We decided to include with the papers
presented in the ISAAC Congress and the U.S.-Japan Seminar several
very good papers by colleagues from the former Soviet Union. These
participants in the ISAAC Congress attended at their own expense.
This volume has the title Direct and Inverse Problems of
Mathematical Physics which consists of the papers on scattering
theory, coefficient identification, uniqueness and existence
theorems, boundary controllability, wave propagation in stratified
media, viscous flows, nonlinear acoustics, Sobolev spaces,
singularity theory, pseudo differential operators, and semigroup
theory.
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